Sumit SinghalSumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

Lace Hill in Yerevan, Armenia by Forrest Fulton Architecture designed using Rhino and Grasshopper

Instead of a towering Iconic image, disconnected from historic, horizontal Yerevan, Lace Hill stitches the adjacent city and landscape together to support a holistic, ultra-green lifestyle, somewhere between rural hillside living and dense cultured urbanity. The 85,000 square meter (915,000 sf) proposal is a new model of development for Yerevan and Armenia that supports a resilient, high-value spatial fabric, dense with overlapping natural and urban phenomenon.

Status: 2010 Competition Entry for International Business Center with an Intercontinental Hotel in Yerevan

Project Team: Jared Fulton, Andrew C. Bryant, Derrick Owens

Software used: Rhino & Grasshopper

To create a new, firmly rooted architecture-urbanism-landscape, the project morphs the common urban element of Yerevan, the superblock, to the site, a truncated hill along the natural amphitheater of Yerevan. This act extends the amphitheater and completes the hill, creating more capacity or “seats” for the viewing of Yerevan and Mt. Ararat, the eternal icon of Armenia. Native plants irrigated with recycled gray water cover the hill. Intricate perforations recalling traditional Armenian lace needlework provide terraced exterior space, natural ventilation, and amazing views for the promenade, hotel rooms, residences, and office space.

Exterior View

Unlike a singular object tower that one simply views from the city below, the lacy, living hill seduces visitors inside to a promenade and a succession of tower-voids. Tower-voids act as dramatic cooling towers in Yerevan’s semi-arid climate. As one moves toward the cooler center, the hill opens to the sky. With the feel of a cathedral or basilica in size and light, pools and tree-topped hills fill these flowing-nodal public spaces. These are spatial monuments to Armenia, carved from the hill like the ancient Armenian Monastery of Gerhard.

Exterior View

Lace Hill not only conserves its own resources within, but also gives back to Yerevan, passively cooling portions of Yerevan during the summer. As north breezes pass over the tower-voids’ ponds, the project acts as a giant evaporative cooling mechanism for the semi-arid city below. Window walls set deep within the terraces shade summer sun. Planted surfaces absorb solar heat, filter air and water-borne toxins, and supports insect and animal life. Geothermal wells and radiant floors efficiently heat and cool spaces. Recycled gray water irrigates agriculture and hill plantings. The lace perforated surface ventilates the hill. The major structure is found in the perforated concrete exterior surfaces, allowing for columnless and beamless flexible spaces. Undulation of the surfaces form structurally efficient vaults and arches while creating a variety of views and maximizing area.

Lace Hill

Sun exposure and views guide location of living and working activities. All living spaces are along the long, meandering south face of the hill, maximizing direct sun, terraces, and incredible views. Offices, which need indirect light and where spectacular views are less valuable, are along the north face of the hill. A narrow office floor plate stepping down toward the south provides adequate, diffuse daylight. Retail, restaurants, exhibition halls, a cinema, and a health center line the promenade at the first level.

Interior View

Pedestrians and cyclists access the hill via a diverse farm-park at the south, east, and west edges of the site. A potential greenway along the amphitheater to the west links the hill to tourist sites and additional pedestrian and bicycle traffic. Vehicular traffic is completely separated. 100% of parking is underground. The adjacent road winds into a tunnel at the western base of the hill, leading to an expansive parking space and entrance to the building above.

Interior View

The project forgoes making an accumulation of object buildings perched over the city, and instead makes one building, creating public spaces within and on it, seamlessly blending with its context. It offers an alternative to typical development.

Instead of shimmering glass, a growing productive surface.

Instead of a sealed building, open sun-drenched terraces.

Instead of a building that imports a fleeting image, a building that invests in performance, connectivity, and function.

Interior View

Forrest Fulton Architecture is an international studio for architecture, planning, and design based in Birmingham, AL, USA. We design architecture to support the best possible life for individuals, communities, and the natural world. Innovative architectural ideas sensitive to place, culture, and climate rigorously develop into form and space. The studio constantly evolves, taking advantage of the latest technological advancements.

Interior View

The studio was founded by Forrest Fulton in 2009 on a strong foundation of experience with built work. Large-scale sophisticated projects at internationally renowned offices followed hands-on design and construction of smaller projects early in his professional career. His work has been published, honored, and exhibited widely.